So, I was going to wait until tomorrow to bring the #MusicSermon#30DayMusicChallenge over here but we #minuswell. The full list plus Days 1 & 2 are below to keep continuity...
Since we know better, we all try to do better... but tell us the problematic bop you just can't let go of.
(No "When you say teenager, how old?" selections, please)
And there has never been a time before that I felt like I had to say that... but somehow this year my spirit knew...
This is forever and always and eternally my answer for this prompt. It's also low key an answer for song that'll change my mood. It makes me so happy 😂
Daz and Kurupt deserved more.
I rebuke the idea that one of the greatest love songs of my young life is problematic
I miss the days of fire ass soundtracks being a standard part of the Black movie experience. They broke new artists, gave us dope collaborations, and introduced us to classic jams.
Every once in a while, you gotta let folks know who you are. Whether it's to remind them you're not the one (or the two) or to let it be known they can't stop your shine.
For Day 5 of the #MusicSermon#BlackMusicMonthChallenge, name a song dedicated to your haters and naysayers.
Some songs create whole worlds... completely cinematic, but audio. For Day 6 of #MusicSermon's #BlackMusicMonth challenge, tell us your favorite storytelling song.
My guess is that a lot of us built up whole playlists for Day 7's #MusicSermon#BlackMusicMonthChallenge prompt. Catalogue streaming was up over current music last year; folks were grabbing musical blankets.
Name a song that brings you peace &/or comfort.
Before the day is over, I want to acknowledge that June 7th is the official anniversary of #BlackMusicMonth's first celebration, over 40 years ago on the white house lawn. It was initially an initiative to protect the business & culture of Black Music. vibe.com/features/edito…
If you grew up in Black household, you know that certain songs mean it's time to clean (it DOES make the cleaning go faster, unless it's gospel). 🧹
For Day 8 of the #MusicSermon#BlackMusicMonthChallenge,
name a must have on your cleaning playlist.
For those that don't know, I love karaoke. Possibly because it perfectly marries my love of music with my love of being extra. 😬
We all got one or two go-to's we know we can take everybody with. For Day 9 of #MusicSermon's #BlackMusicMonthChallenge, what your karaoke song?
Following up on yesterday's karaoke question, Day 10 of #MusicSermon's #BlackMusicMonthChallenge is about those songs that have you doing full in-house, in-car, in-shower performances. What's the song you just KNOW you do your good singing on?
And those aren't my Top 10, they're my favorites. My top ten would be a more objective list.
Day 10 of #MusicSermon's #BlackMusicMonth may require multiple answers for some of y'all, because it can be hard to chose just one favorite Hip Hop/R&B collab.
Yesterday we celebrated your favorite hip-hop/R&B collabs. Today let's talk R&B duets. I loooove a good duet, and for a while they seemed like an endangered musical species. For Day 12 of the #MusicSermon#BlackMusicMonthChallenge, share your fave R&B duet.
Some songs are whole lessons on sub-genres and music eras. When you hear them you hear the entire music landscape they come from, whether it's a time period, a super-producer wave or a music trend. For Day 13 of #MusicSermon's #BlackMusicMonthChallenge, name a definitive song.
For a good bit of us, life is slowly trying to seek a new level of normal. We're heading out (cautiously, hopefully) or staying in bc we don't trust it! At any rate, it's a new chapter. For Day 14 of #MusicSermon's #BlackMusicMonthChallenge, share your post-pandemic theme song
Producers and beat makers ain't the same. Great production is timeless. It sounds both effortless and masterful at the same time. And it has a signature, even if the signature shifts. For Day 15 of #MusicSermon's #BlackMusicMonthChallenge, name a song by your fave producer.
We all got at least one joint by our favorite artists that just don't quite curl all the way over. We may not admit it publicly... we just quietly avoid it.
For Day 16 of the #MusicSermon#BlackMusicMonthChallenge, admit it - what's a song by your fave that you DON'T like?
So this is usually when fights start breaking out during the #BlackMusicMonthChallenge, but maybe since I'm on the burner it'll stay civil 😶.
For Day 17, what's a song everybody loves that you haaaaatttte?
I scheduled this one for a Friday on purpose, because this prompt can get y'all in trouble. 😏
For Day 18 of #MusicSermon#BlackMusicMonthChallenge, tell us the sexiest song you know.
I'm sorry to be late with a VERY VERY important #Juneteenth#BlackMusicMonthChallenge prompt, but your girl had a day.
But let's get it in, even late: for Day 19, what is the BLACKEST song you can thing of??
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I find a deep level of irony with Black comics who count Pryor as an influence, mentor, etc, but are a homophobic in their comedy. If you ever watch Pryor's roast or read his autobiography, he both jokes and talks directly about being involved with and having sex with transwomen.
And not with shame or to explain it away. It just was.
Exactly. Pryor was pansexual before we had a name for it. And again, would talk about it HIMSELF. It wasn't a secret or a scandal.
For the people asking if society won't give R Kelly a second chance/chance to redeem himself: that chance was when he was acquitted in 2008.
His response was to start moving his conquests to a home in GA where the age of consent is 16.
He ESCALATED. For over 10 more years.
... and, and and... he STILL doesn't think he did anything wrong. He was quoted in court as saying geniuses should be able to do whatever they want because of what they give to the world.
The man IS a musical genius and a savant, but he is not remorseful. And he would not change.
Any man who beat multiple rape and child pornography allegations and then nicknamed himself after a figure who lured little children away from their village with music was NOT trying to change shit.
I know that there isn't an active D9 sorority on every university campus at all times, HOWEVER, the white sorority rush week & life is one of the most homogenous cultures I've ever observed. I've never seen what BW could find there. It's also *just* college; we rock for life.
Blackness isn't a monolith either, and the D9 may not be for everybody, but l when I meet Black Tri-Delts or Chi-Omegas, I'm just like "....Oh..."
Also, those are social organizations, all D9 orgs are service, so you may want to just party and do your thing with folks for 3 3/4 years. That's cool. But to go back to the original tweet, asking 100+ yr old white SOCIAL orgs founded by and for WASPS and southern debutantes...
If Kelly Price gets on video looking like she's ill or calls in somewhere with labored breath (bc everyone who says they have knowledge of what's going on with her say she's *still* recovering from COVID) them people just gonna start talking about THAT.
Her sister's trying to drop an album. Tomorrow. That's all I need to know about the type time they on.
Her daughter says she's fine. Her lawyer says she's fine.
She just ain't wanna talk to THEM ni**as.
I have the possibly unpopular opinion that as long as authorities are convinced she's safe, she doesn't owe us anything, especially if she's still recovering from COVID. There's obviously a lot going on in her family life we don't know about.